Hank Adams Kiewit Death, SVP for Kiewit Construction Has Passed Away, What happened to Him?: Executive Vice President of Kiewit Infrastructure Group and Peter Kiewit Sons Co. Board member Hank Adams died. No formal statement has been made on Hank Adams’ death. However, online reports claim Hank Adams died. Hank Adams’ death was poorly documented at publishing. Near 1977, Peter Kiewit and Sons engaged Hank Adams as a Bolt Hill Station field engineer near Baltimore.
Fairleigh Dickinson University awarded him a B.S. in construction engineering technology and State University of New York Delhi an Associate Degree in Applied Science in 1979. After a year, he became Field Engineer/Superintendent on the Fort McHenry Sunken Tube Tunnel in Baltimore. The Dadeland South/Hialeah Station project in Miami, Baltimore road building, Cleveland Tower City Bridges, and Pennsylvania road and highway projects were also enormous.
He became Northeast District Area Manager and Heavy Construction Grow Tunnelling Division Manager in 1999. He became Eastern District district manager in 2001, managing Chicago, Mid-Atlantic, and Northeast projects. Hank Adams was appointed Eastern Region Division Manager in 2008. His executive jurisdiction covers Eastern, Southeast, TIC Marine, Underground, Mass Electric Industrial (Boston), and Transit Districts. He makes final choices on Districts’ operational zone profit and loss, business development, human resources, safety, and quality.
He supervises national projects and maintains strategic market leadership through his many district managers, area managers, and senior staff. He was elected to the Peter Kiewit Sons Co. board and became Kiewit Infrastructure Group executive vice president in 2013. Adams supports the business by joining heavy construction trade associations. President of the American Society of Civil Engineers Construction Institute and New Jersey Chapter Associated General Contractors trustee. He sits on SUNY Delhi and Virginia Tech industry boards. Achievements of Hank Adams joined Moles in 1995. After working on the membership committee, he was secretary from 2005 to 2007 and treasurer in 2009.
After serving as Moles Award Committee Chairman in 2010 and First and Second Vice President, he became President in 2014. New Jersey Associated General Contractors of America and Associated Construction Contractors of New Jersey have awarded him leadership posts. The 2012 SUNY Delhi Distinguished Alumnus Award was his. Served on Virginia Tech’s Myers-Lawson School of Construction industry board. He and Beth had seven granddaughters and four daughters.